Pakistan wants to be taken seriously in the fight against Islamic militants in the Middle East

Members of the Taliban gather at the site of the execution of three men accused of murdering a couple during a robbery in Ghazni Province April 18, 2015.
Stringer/REUTERS
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistan's military, long accused of harboring insurgents who fight its cause in Afghanistan and beyond, says its role in brokering landmark Taliban peace talks last week proves it is serious about tackling Islamist militancy in the region.

The heads of the army and Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency were personally involved in bringing about talks between the Afghan Taliban and Kabul government on July 8 near Islamabad, said two senior officials close to the process.

The negotiations were a tentative first step toward ending war in neighboring Afghanistan that kills thousands of people each year, as government forces fight Taliban insurgents whose hardline Islamist regime was toppled in 2001.

A genuine bid by Pakistan to broker peace could help stem violence, although al Qaeda and other groups are active in the region and new Islamic State offshoots add another layer of danger.

The fledgling peace process may yet fail, especially since Afghan Taliban leaders are divided on talks.

Doubts also exist across South Asia about Pakistan's true motives, given that the military is accused of fostering militants in Afghanistan and Kashmir as a way of pursuing regional rivalry with India. The military has denied the charge.

Pakistani officials insist the civilian government and military recognize that Afghanistan's war threatens their own security by empowering insurgents who launch deadly attacks on their side of the border.

Army chief Gen. Raheel Sharif in particular has made Afghanistan's peace process a "top foreign policy goal," said a Defense Ministry official, speaking anonymously because he was not authorized to talk to the media.

"For General Raheel, convincing Afghans to end the war is just as important as fighting anti-Pakistani militants," another senior security source said.

"He is the chief who has convinced the army that the militant threat inside Pakistan is as important as the strategic tussle with India."

New leaders

Several current and former officials in Afghanistan, who suspect Pakistan of funding and arming the Taliban insurgency across the border, question whether it genuinely supports dialogue.

"Pakistan is taking this new step under internal and external pressure," said former Afghan interior minister Umar Daudzai. "We have to wait and see whether the step is of a tactical nature or is a genuine policy shift."

Pressure from China, a key regional ally and investor, is understood to have played a role in Pakistan's intervention, as Beijing believes militants from its restive Xinjiang region receive training in lawless areas of Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Changes in leadership in Pakistan and Afghanistan also helped pave the way for last week's talks.

In Pakistan, General Sharif became army chief in 2013 and his close ally Rizwan Akhtar took over the ISI the next year.

And since Afghan President Ashraf Ghani took office last September, he has made improving relations with Pakistan a priority, in contrast to his predecessor Hamid Karzai.

That has led to condemnation inside Afghanistan, however. A May agreement for the ISI and Afghanistan's spy agency to share information about militants caused a political uproar.

As for India, which fought two wars with Pakistan over Muslim-majority Kashmir and blames its neighbor for fomenting unrest there, mistrust runs high, despite a meeting between the two prime ministers at a Russian summit last week.

"India is very skeptical about this entire thing," said Sameer Patil, fellow for national security studies at Mumbai-based think tank Gateway House.

He added Delhi felt it had been sidelined from the process. U.S. and Chinese observers attended the Taliban talks.

Shared threat

Pakistan backed the Taliban's rise to power in Afghanistan in the 1990s, and many of the movement's leaders are believed to be hiding in the country.

But army attitudes towards Islamist proxies have changed with the advent of Pakistan's own Taliban movement, which has launched attacks in major cities that killed hundreds of people.

One of the worst attacks in Pakistan's history was on an army-run school in the northwestern city of Peshawar last December, killing more than 130 pupils. Months earlier, Pakistan's military had launched an offensive against militants in the North Waziristan region that is still ongoing.Islamabad wants Afghanistan's help in capturing or killing Pakistani Taliban chief Mullah Fazlullah, who claimed responsibility for the massacre.